Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

De Lane Lea Studios

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Phone
  
+44 20 7432 3800

London borough
  
City of Westminster

Founded
  
1947

De Lane Lea Studios

Address
  
75 Dean St, Soho, London W1D 3PU, UK

Parent organization
  
Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden Limited

Similar
  
Decca Studios, Headley Grange, Saville Theatre, Abbey Road Studios, Advision Studios

De Lane Lea Studios is a recording studio, currently based in Dean Street, Soho, London, England, UK. Although the studios have mainly been used for dubbing feature films and television programmes, major artists such as the Beatles, Soft Machine, Queen, the Rolling Stones, Bee Gees, The Who, the Jimi Hendrix Experience, Pink Floyd, Renaissance, Electric Light Orchestra and Deep Purple recorded songs in their studios, particularly at their former premises at 129 Kingsway [1] and at Engineers Way, Wembley, where Queen recorded demos in 1971.[2] After De Lane Lea, these studios were taken over by Lee Lighting which then became the "Fountain Studios" many years after that. It is now home to shows like The X Factor.

Major Jacques De Lane Lea, a French intelligence attaché for the British Government, founded De Lane Lea Studios in 1947 to dub English films into French. The studios were adapted according to the demands of the market and expanded significantly on various sites in the 1960s and ’70s. Music recording increased dramatically and the growth of commercial radio and TV also led to new work in advertising.

De Lane Lea now specialises in Sound post-production for cinema and television. It includes 6 individual studios, including Studio 1, the biggest in-town dubbing theatre with one of Europe's most powerful AMS Neve DFC mixing consoles, built on what was previously a TV studio and before that an orchestral recording studio. Recently the studios have been used for films by directors such as Nick Park, Tim Burton, Mike Newell, Guillermo del Toro and Chris Weitz.

Warner Bros.purchased the studios in November 2012.

The who at de lane lea studios in soho london in march 1967


References

De Lane Lea Studios Wikipedia